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The Brussels Post, 1961-04-06, Page 3BABY CHICKS BRAY can give prompt shipment, day. aid and started chicks. Some Antes In, Cress and .other bregri Pillle16...to week old.' Also, Book May broilers now. See local agent, or write Dray HatcherY. Join North, Hatnlltolli FISHER ORCHARDS' CHICKS OVR 41st, year serving Canada's poultry industry with baby .chicks, famoUs for heavy laying or efficient meat produe. Lion, See our catalogue and price lief before you order, Early order sayings available on day.old pullets to Febru- ary 26th. 1961. The Fisher Orchards, Box 175, Burlington, Ontario. MOATS BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALII FOR sale, General stere, full line, self- serve, good turnover, central heating, living quarters, Write: Dean A klatch, Belmont, Ont. Separate Schools In The United States Cardinal,' Spellman has done a disservice to the country by re- injecting a religious controversy into the issue of Federal aid to the public sehools,. In a speech in New York the other day the ;Cardinal criticized a... Kennedy task force report recommending, financial assistance to .all public schools on the ground that "such legislation would discriminate against a multitude of 'children because their parents phoose to exercise t h e i r constitutional right to educate them in accord- ance with their religious belief." his Eminence is, we think, un- der a misapprehension. -, Public schools are operated by 'public servants and suppotted by :public funds because of a belief that they promote the general -welfare. All Americans' have a .right to send their children, to 'those sehooli. All Americans also have a right, if they prefer, to send their children to parochial or other private schools for spe- cialized education in religious doctrine or for other special needs' and interests. But they cannot expect public funds 'to • support those parochial Or pri- vate sehools; and least of all those that give instruction in re- ligious matters. Cardinal Spellman needs to be• told bluntly that under the Unit- ed States Constitution public fends may not be used for any manner of religious instruction; moreover, wherever public ,funds are employed, some measures of public control must follow to protect the public interest. The proposed Federa.1 aid to educa- tion discriminates against no Americans. It leaves the public schools open to all without dis- crimination; and ,it protects the religious freedom of those who wish to send their children to religious, schools by keeping those schools altogether free from public regulation. Happily, the United States has been free from the kind of bitter conflict: over state support of church schools which 'has enven- omed French politics ior hall a century. That kind of. conflict is " calamitous for church and state 'alike. The founders of the American Republic sought to - guard against it by erecting an abselute wall of 'separation be- tween the two: The Cardinal had better face' it: that wall is not going to 'be breached now. — Washington Post, Fight training — Two Styles Snowdrifts were -piling up to more than 4 feet, and' heavy- weight champion Floyd Patter- -son churned his arms furiously as he swept snow off hia maroon 1961 Lincoln Continental one night recently. After driving from his Spring Valley, N,Y., training camp * to watch his younger brother, Raymond; fight , in the New York Golden Gloves (he Won' by a technical knocks out), Patteteon had stopped, at his Long, Island home for a mid- night supper. Now, at 2 a.m., the champion land, ho' thoughts of Sleep. "I'M going back to Spring Valley (54' miles' away)," he Said, "I'm in training:" Sandra Patterson flied to dies attack her husband, "It's snowing too hard," she said. "Yoti'll never °t LitOilt11-y "' 2:30, Patteesori, Hatless and gloteleas; had dug his eat Ott be the drifts.- By 7.30, after Passitig Manche& of stranded cars siorig the highly-vs, he reached the base of the long hill which, leada to his trainiiig Caritas, Then Patterson pkikect ear in the side of a drift, trudged' up the hill; arid; several hours later, went back to work, Some 11 400 7liiles• away. ItlgeinAk Johanson, the challenger for the lietiVeight title, •Rigged lazily in 'Florida warmth: DRIVE CAREFULLY jell Slave Intr. dit, °WC Sea Voices Sound In San. Francisio In San Francisco and ,its variegated environs, people not Only talk about the, weather, they listen to it, too. This is the sea- son of our tules,'the time when low fog occurs, nearly every morning at the mouths of our rivers and bays. These fogs are unlike to great clouds of moist catspaw fluff that stalk in, archbacked like Hallo- we'en, on midsummer afteinbons on the coast, from Alaska almost everywhere south to the Santa Barbara archipelago. These tules steal in after mid- night, silently down the rivers and canyons in the coast range like nocturnal back-fence prow- lers. The tules come 'off the delta marshes when the land cools down, bringing their music with them as their gray tails flick past the lighthouses and fog stations that are massed like the San Francisco Symphony around this great mountain-rimmed, sea- washed orchestra pit. These tules have a London look to them, but the sound Is orchestrally pitched 'to. coastal California in its doleful diaphony. They make our midwinter morn- ings musical in the way that Scottish bagpipes perhaps wake the Highland mists with their shrill reveille. Only our sym- phonic arrangement of ocean fog signals speak their sonorous warnings to groping mariners in a deeper and more vibrant range all around the rim of the sea that surrounds two-thirds of this cold, dripping. city. This is the kind of music that better lends itself to the sensitive interpretation of one of our sea- beaten old bar pilots than to the Sari Francisco Symphony's fam- ed Maestro Enrique Jorda. They have an "ear" for all this fog, these San Francisco pilots, and the'romance.of its serious Music ' is enriched by their wary transla- -tion-of sounds into pieces it the cold gray void of these midsvinter mornings, writes Harlan Trott in The Christian Science Monitor. r;Ahoy, there," yelled a "lost" aeronaut spotting a fermer gaz- ing tip at him through a rift in the fog/ "where am. I?" "Up in a balloon," shouted 'back the farmer. This is just the kind of a• dilem- ma , the fog stations dispel for the Sin Francisco pilots, so that even when there. is no break in the fog they' bring their ship' feet "going hOnle" to Southeast Asia, the cocky young doctor, then 32, insisted on making a 40- clay lecture and TV tour of the *United States, "begging, bum- ming, borrowing, and from time to time, stealing just A little bit" for his string- of makeshift jun- gle hospitals, with mats for 'beds, close to the Chinese border. flis schedule was filled with the'zeal of a man in a desperate hurry. Dooley had been in, a hur- ry, in fact, since the Vietminh Cpmmunists crushed the French at Dienbienphu in 1954. Then, as a U.S. Navy medical officer, he had helped to evacuate 610,000 'Indo-Chinese from lied-dominat- ed North Vietnam, and had, staya ed on in Laos as a civilian M.D. Now, cancer hastened his steps, "Cancee creates fear, and fear comes from, ignorance," he told his American audiences, "Cancer should be regarded as just an- other, incident in our lives — like a, broken leg. I want people to see me moving around, talking, planning my life — even though I have a dubious future," Luck was with him. His can- cer temporarily arrested, h e headed back to Laos with enough money' froin his lectures and from his, best-selling books, "De- liver Us From Evil." and "Edge of Tomorrow," to continue his care at thousands of suffering Asians. Two •months ages pain began to bite at. TOM Dooley's spine. Taken to a Hong. Kong hospital, he was told that be had a "bony deterioration of the vertebrae," The cancer had apread from his chest to his spine. Flown to Mem- orial Hospital in New York last ,Dec, 27, wearing a heavy back brace which he called his "iron maiden," Dooley grinned and said: "All right, it's malignant. But I am not going to quit . . . until my back, my brain, my Wood, and my bones collapse." Heavy sedatives dulled his ag- ony; his only visitors at Memor- ial Hospital were his immediate family, and Cardinal Spellman, who on the day of. Dooley's 34th birthday last month, paid the sick man a call. "I tried to assure him that in his •34 years, he had done what very few have done in the • allotted scriptural life span," said the cardinal. ,The night after his birthday, Tom Dooley 'died quietly •in his sleep. From NEWSWEEK 4====! MERRY MENAGERIE Australia Puts Up An Iran Curtain Australia's bloodthirsty wild dills, the Bingos, are on the rant- page in a new burst of savage ;laughter, re, some cases, a sin, gle clog has slain 000 fullegeeWn aheeP in a night. Dingps teach their pups to be killers, just as prehistoric tribes taught their young men. They kill sheep after sheep, not be- cause of hunger so mueh as the sheer lust of slaughter. So powerful are the dog's wolflike jaws that once it grips its prey it never lets go, but tears away the flesh in huge chunks, Yet the dingo itself is no big- ger than a collie and when kept in a zoo looks as docile and com- panionable as any family pet of similar build. Until recently, however, din- gos have been destroying 500,- 000 sheep and lambs a year in Queensland alon e. Attacking most persistently in the prov- ince's western, area, the marau- ders have driven many wool breeders into the bankruptcy courts. According to government esti- mates, ,they have reduced this region's sheep population 'from 24,000,000 to 13,000,000 Since ' 1950. But now graziers have esta- blished a new defence line, 7,000 miles of closely-meshed iron fence to hold •off killer packs. In Queensland the fence is 3,500 miles long, 0 ft. 8 in. high, com- pletely enclosing 210,938 square , miles „of richest sheep-raising - country, In the same area, some 600,- 000 cattle are pastured, and din- goes feed just as savagely on selves as lambs. This new' abarrier now links up with an older 1,700 Miles of fencing, running over mountains, through lush valleys and rich earmlends to South Australia, where it reaches the shores of the. Great Australian Bight. There is a third "iron curtain," forming a safe breeding area for sheep in Western Australia. These fences have to be pa- trolled like any war-time Iron- tier. Kangaroos don't like such ob- structions. Some charge the fence at high speed and crash through, leaving gaps for prowl- ing dingo packs to sneak in and run berserk among flocks and herds. Descended from the wolves of Asia, the dingo first came to Australia as the pet or hunting flog of migriting aborigines. It's easily the Most destructive im- migrant the country has ever received! CAUTIOUS — Sandy Cooper, 16, '1 comes ,up with a pair of snow' ' gaggles as protection against sun and snow. these gogglet had previously been to the Antarctic. FOR SALE APPROVED foundation brood mare, three quarters thoroughbred by Pena- -Comic, 18.8 hands, late 1960 foal still at side.- Mare registered hunter 'with Canadian National Livestock eeeerds, available to purchaser by May let. War-ranted sound. Write. X. L. Barnes, 541 Third Avenue, Ottawa 1, Ont. INSTRUCTION LABORATORY TECHNICIANS • (REOISTIRED) ' Required by March 1961: SENIOR, wt.* advancement to CHIEF TECHNICIAN, must have blood bank expvienset also JUNIOR. Modern Laboratory in SSW hospital wing, attractive personnel poli- cies, Applicallone statiNg experience and salary expected to Johnstoh, Administrator. LEAMINGTON DISTRICT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL LeamIngten, Ontario EARN More! Bookkeeping, Salesman- eons 500. ,Ask for, free circular No. ,. Salesman-ship. Shorthand, Typeersittot. etc. Le Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1 Bay. Street, Toronto. MALI OR FEMALE NELP WANTIB MEDICAL NATURE'S NIL/ — DIXON'S REMIDT MIR RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS. THOUSANDS /RAISIN* IT. MUNRO'S DRUG STORI st4 ILGIN OTTAWA $1.21 Express Celled. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE DANISH the torment of dry uterus rashes and weeping akin trouble.. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scalding and burning eerie= ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond. readily to the stainless, odorless Ointment,- regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem, Sent Post Free en itecetpt of Price PRICE 13.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1645 St. Clair .Avenue last, TORONTO NUTRIA EXETER, Huron Co, $1,000 cash will. give you possession of well located brick home, suitable for 2 apartments or large , family. Modern kitchen and 9 piece bath, oil burning furnace. Total price 86,000. Also newly renovated S apartment house, separate entrances, bathrooms and meters. Oil burning fur- nace, plenty of hot water. Fully occu- pied. Rental income 8165 per month. Total price $8,500. Terms. Other houses. C. V. Pickard, Realtor. Phone let Exeter, Ont. ESTATE SALE DOCTOR'S home with office attached, easy terms, 'phone write or visit Arthur Bradley, Richardson's Real Estate Lim- ited, 270 N. Christina, Sarnia. Edge- water 6.2226. SALES HELP AND AGENTS WANTED — FEMALES Wonderful earning opportunities Belt- ing the fastest growing line of Cora meties in North America, the Famous Studio Girl Hollywood Cosmetics, No territory restrictions, Highest commis- alone enables you 'to operate your own business in part or full time selling. Write Studio Girl Hollywood (Canada), 502 Hopkins Ave., Peterboro, Ont. • New' lisue Dealer • TOPICALS = Maps, Flowers, -PeoPlii. Plana, Flags, Animals, Children Ad- venturers, U.N.. U.S. British Empire'. FREE WRITE for fully illustrated catalogue. Published weekly. Intl, Bureau. Phila- telic DiVision, P.O. Box 2052, Buffalo 1, N.Y, SEWING MACHINES SAVE ON SEWING MACHINES Must clear 700 machineal St% lower than elsewhere. Standard Model Elec- tric Portable — reverse and drop feed, Mtn. Beat quality, $65.50. Send cheque, or M.O. Shipped Prepaid. For C.O.D. PIncl 10% deposit. Sirncoe Importers Distributing Ca, Box 915, Barrie, Ont. STAMPS CANADA, Fisheries dollar, catalog 11.21 for 300 in coin, to adult approv applicants, for our fine used Bri Colonial stamps. W. Franks, 284 Glen- forest Ha, Toronto, ' AM breaking up accumulation of stamps of 80 years. British Colon)** and USA only. 25 different 10e, 50 di ferent 250, 100 different 500, 200 d !trent Si, No junk. Add postage. Be ter grades and covers on approv . T. R. Graham, 296A Gienforest Ed., Toronto 12, Ontario. EXCHANGE your duplicates! Send 100 stir:ripe and 10i, receive 100 different in exchange! 1 per 1,0001 Approved -Co., 242 East 54 St., New York 5, N.Y. STAMPS from your favourite countrieir OM approval by country collection. Stamps priced singly' and per collection., J, Gaza 1583 Central, Windsor, Ont. MAILStrit Electrically powered, thi4e-wheelect "Mailstees* Will seen be delivering mail in U.S. suburban areas, Maintart• ince costs are said to be slyly 30 per cent of the gasoline types *hit. Carrying spare iiitriated 62 per tent. see CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING bUILDING MATBRIALg "CORNERBEAO, cornerite, g y • la troughing, Es mar 'Tickers and Staples, Special shipment specially pric. ad, Write to Box 313, Oakville, Ont." COINS OPPOR TUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN , . SE A HAIRDRESSER .101,4 CANADA'S LEAPING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing pleasant, dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates, America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 311 Moor St. vv,. Termite Branches: 44 ling St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa 111111114111111 OPPORTUNIT111$ MODERN soft ice Sperm. and food business for sale in growing town of POrt H9Pe. Excellent locaticat on No. 2 Highway, equipment, Inventory $12,. 644. Selling for Personal reasons., 114,511e full price, 17,000 down. Long Bros„ Realtors, F, G. Long, Port Hope. PERSONAL SAVE SAVE SUMO YOUR OWN BOAT Moulded Mahogany Hulls — From 12 ft. (4 ply) to Cruiser Hulls 25 ft. (12 ply). Second Hand Johnson, Evinrude Outboard Motors, Boat Trailers and Accessories. JOHNSON'S MOATS & MOTORS, PEFFERLAW, ONT, "COINS wanted, Pay highest pricea. 1961 Coin Catalogue 250, GarY's (8) 9910 Jasper Ave., Edmonton, Alta," - 1961 ILLUSTRATED retail price booklet of coins, bills, medals, coin and stamp collectors' supplies, 40 pages 34: Wholesale, retail. Canada Coin Ex. change, 80 Richmond Street East, Tor- onto, — — DIETITIAN WANTED UNWANTED HAIR VANISHED away with Saca-Pelo. Seat- Pelo is different. It does not dissolver or remove hair from the surface, but penetrates and retards growth of u wanted hair. Lor-Beer Lab, Ltd„ 5, 671, Granville, Vancouver 2, MO, HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED, guaranteed, mailed in plain parcel, including catalogue and So* book free with trial assortment. 18 for 11.00 (Finest quality). Western Distribu- ters, box 24-TPF, Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SOFT' LANDING — Donald Brock 28, leaps a hurdle on snow- shoes during competition in Lewiston, Maine. He holds the 440-yard snowshoe dash record. REPLACEMENT DUE TO RETIREMENT 5110-11111, HOSPITAL APPLY THE ADMINISTRATOR QUEEN ELIZABETH • HOSPITAL 130 Dunn Ave. TORONTO, FARMER'S CAMERA CLUE lOX 91, .GALT, ONT. Films developed and 8 magna prints 40e 12 magna prints 600 Reprints 50 each. KODACOLOR Developing roll goo (not including prints. Color prints 300 each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m.m. '20 ex- posures mounted In slides $1.20. Color prints from slides 320 each. Money re- fundtd In full for unprinted negatives. POULTRY DINNERWARE safety., to sea or to •port as much ly,:agiir as by compass. Cad type does not lend its_ elf very- well to describing 'the or- chestral variations by which the San:Francisco bar pilot plies his uncanny trade: Somewhere be- tween the Farallon Islands` and the 'San, Francisco 'Lightship, he makes contact between the pilot schooner's jolly boat and, the Mooting gray monster wailing for him •like a lost lamb hi the 'fog. -Up the sea ladder goes this horny handed maestro, He takes sta- tion far out on the-bridge 'wing, asks the captain for "ahead, one third," and sings out to the helmsman, "Come' to zero six eight "true." After an interim of local silence, the yoke inside cries out, "Steering zero six. eight true." "Steady, so!" replies the pilot as his ears begin to translate the dismal music rumbling around the, horizonless grey waste. Aft of the spaceless ship, ona what seamen call a' reciprocal • beafing, the two-tone diaphone horn on the red-hulled San Francisco Lightship, now only a Rimless noise, makes her high- 1 o w once-every-three-minutes contribution to the sailors' symr.: phony. And astern on this south- westerly bearing, the knowing, pilot reassuringly n o the somewhat fainter but more fre- quent portions from 'the "wood- wincle"• farther' out where the Farallon Islands are blacked out in the fog, out of sight but not out of sound. The Farallon'a two- toner lets go with one blast and a group of two blasts every minute. There's a two-second awa-a-a-rn," a four-second silence, then another 'two-second "wa-a-a-rn," followed this time by a one-second silence, then the second 'two-second blast, follow- ed by 49'seconds of eerie silence. Gradually the "music" astern fades out, but inshore the 'air horns gradually rise to a Valky- rian tempo as -Point Reyes" one blast every-45 seconds,` and point Bonito and. Mile Rocks all: yoke their 'friendly dissonance at once. BY the time the white cylindrical tower at Mile Rocks on the Southern side Of the Golden Gate entrance is a 'twice-a-minute_ three-second blast broad on the starboard beam, 'the air horns on the high red span dead ahead are beginning to outshout Pt. Diablo's siren a 'mile clown the Marin thore, Now the rumble of traffic on the bridge intrudes on the au- thentic sea sounds and the log music is loudest between the . midchannel foghorn on t h e mighty span and Lime Point's rhapsody of diaphragm horn and chime hard strider the Presidio shore of the city itself, The inner harbor Orchestration, the'air horns of Alcatraz, V'erbsi Buena, `the Western Pacific Rail- read lefty ship, of Fort Mason and Hunter's Point; blend with a medley Of pier-head bells and sirens such as every San Fran- disco Office Worker enjoys, In- deed from the fat-out Fatallon§ to the mitt-seeded ferry tower; these tulds make our Midwiiitee mornings brie glorious cacophony of fog-Muted music.. Farnotis Jungle Doctor Diet CHIEF DIETITIAN ENGLISH Bone China Dinnerware. All leading makes. Big ravings. Write for information. Emerson's China, Simcoe, Ontario. TRUE.I.INE No, 365 (white egg-layers) R.I. Red crossed Columbia. Rock. Ft:l. Red crossed Leghorn. Red 3 way cross. Available now at Austin's Ilatchery. Phone 3692 Arltona, Out, FARM MACHINERY PROPERTIES FOR SALE NEW Manure Spreader Apronl with original No. 67 chain, 75 bushel size, $38,50 complete. For information write Martin Metals, Route 2, Waterloo, Ont. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE, 3,000 egg incubator, electric, 5125,00. Also used bee equipment, Langstroth, reasonable. nee Green- field, A.R. No. 3, Meaford, Ont, CHEQUE Protectors: Reconditioned and Very guaranteed. Several models. Verea- sonable. Information: T. H. Graham, 208A Glenforest Rdi, Toronto 12, Ont, HORSES ten OM our money end linty cur-own dog!" 4.111214M=ZINIM=PCIONIIL ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing Nutria consider the following points which this organiza- tion offers: 1.—The best available stock, no cross- bred or standard 'types recommended. 2,—The reputation of a plan which Is proving itself , substantiated by files of satisfied ranchers, 9.—Full insurance against replace- ment, should they not live or in the event of sterility (all fully explained in .our certificate of merit.) REGISTERED NURSES Immediate openings for General Duty, rs Hoes In a 20-bed private hospital located in a modern Pulp Mill town in Northwestern Ontario. Stae:et* salary $259.00 per month plus r and board at no cost. Annual incre- ments in recognition of satisfactory service. Accommodation provided IM single room:: in comfortable Runtime Residence. Employee• benefits includi Group Insurance, Pension Plan, and I ib•ra I vacation allowance. Year round recreational facilities. Apply, stating full Particulars of age, ex- perience, r,etIlabliity, etc. P. Sox No, 230, 123-lith Street, New Toronto, Ont. 4.—We give you only mutations which are in demand for fur garments. 5.—You receive from this organization e guaranteed pelt market in writing. 6.—Membership in o u r exclusive breeders' association, whereby only purchasers of 'this stock may Partici. pate in the benefits so offered. 7.--Prices for Breeding. Stock start at , 5200. a pair. Speciai offer to those who qualify: earn ydur Nutrria on our cooperative basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd., R,R. No. 2, Stouffyille, Ontario, ISSUE 8.:,,,1961 Do Heavy Trucks Pay ;Enough ? Heavy trucks should be paying considerably more taxes, Con- gress has been told alter a' three- year study of, who benefits from. highway' building and who is' paying the bills. 'The report has other findings, Of course, but we expect this, one to get a great deal of the atten- tion. Railroad men .will see to that. Rail apoltesinen have long pointed to the contrast between theii: expenses for rail routes and the tax-supported roadWays for highway freight service. - Some big trucks, the, report says, haVe 'annual benefits from the road system of $1;084 to $3,143, but are taxed Only $820. The inter-city buses do well too. The report shows annual benefits of $705 to $1;370 in re-' turn for taxes of $540. The contrast is with a Paaseh- ,ger car for which the benefits etee $19.38 to $21.78 but the taxes are $28.19. Mere figures are to come later out Of statistical, analysis of testa recently completed et Ottawa.,, Ill. In this teat 200 variations in highway construction were built and tested by 17 million miles of operations of trucks of several sites, Autotribbiles, delivery' !reeks and Tetra tiatcks could be served well by less 6knees:lire pave- merits than are being built. The heaviest trucks, ebotit five per cent 'of all motor vehicles, re- quire atteriger suilatee. This additional teat fer big itrucks is a Matter of Most in- knee interest to Wadi lineS, 'and railroad Mon. It la all but deka eaM that any conclusion Whet- eVer will be' eliallenged by One side or the Other. This is the disputed grotind in te, which the new figures'move.' The report already is being sailed.. barrithercial Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.') Afiiiie Lever — One Who heitte: loinrariO . In the "Arid pide his eke le the 11.4.heiliL „ . MOVIES IN THE SKY MOstiis,. Will be a regular thIng this Skit* On TWA jets. Showings will be given On, all, nonstop t heiat;td,Coait' end transatlantic flights: • A Ist,trini 'prOleiiter #OCUSei on a screen at the front of the first-dolt tabitt, headsets are wed' fie that Soundtrack, ,"Theet is no Wee: for With Of :Cancermelanoma,With Ittek;' I hate. a 5040 :Chatice to live abaaritaight months , CalitilY, TOM .DooleyMedi that grit». Self 'pregitOSISL in No= vember 1959. The frail, blue-eyed :young Irish-Amerleari. ,had lust received the .$10,000 Mutual of thrialie award •inediaal Tnissionary Work. Irt the jtingles Of taos. Earlier that year; DoOlty had been .OgerAted .onaS Memory ler for a Itiit-SPreeding theft elitieer,